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PowerPoint® Lecture Slides prepared by Vince Austin, University of Kentucky
The Digestive System
Human Anatomy & Physiology, Sixth Edition
Elaine N. Marieb
Copyright © 2004 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
23
Digestive System: Overview
 The alimentary canal or gastrointestinal (GI) tract digests
and absorbs food
 Alimentary canal – mouth, pharynx, esophagus, stomach,
small intestine, and large intestine
 Accessory digestive organs – teeth, tongue, gallbladder,
salivary glands, liver, and pancreas
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Digestive System: Overview
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Figure 23.1
Digestive Process
The GI tract is a “disassembly” line:
 Nutrients become more available to the body in each step
There are six essential activities:
 1) Ingestion, 2) propulsion, and 3) mechanical digestion
 4) Chemical digestion, 5) absorption, and 6) defecation
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Digestive Process
Figure 23.2
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Gastrointestinal Tract Activities
 1) Ingestion – taking food into the digestive tract
 2) Propulsion – swallowing and peristalsis
 Peristalsis – waves of contraction and relaxation of
muscles in the organ walls
 3) Mechanical digestion – chewing, mixing, and churning
food
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Peristalsis and Segmentation
Esophagus
Intestine
Figure 23.3
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Gastrointestinal Tract Activities
 4) Chemical digestion – catabolic breakdown of food
 5) Absorption – movement of nutrients from the GI tract to
the blood or lymph
 6) Defecation – elimination of indigestible and unabsorbed
solid wastes
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Peritoneum and Peritoneal Cavity
Peritoneum – serous membrane of the abdominal cavity
 Visceral peritoneum – covers external surface of most
digestive organs
 Parietal peritoneum – lines the body wall
Peritoneal cavity
 Lubricates digestive organs
 Allows them to slide across one another
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Figure 23.5a
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Mesentery – double layer of peritoneum that provides:
 Vascular and nerve supplies to the viscera
 A means to hold digestive organs in place and store fat
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Blood Supply: Splanchnic Circulation
Arteries and the organs they serve include:
 The hepatic, splenic, and left gastric: spleen, liver, and
stomach
 Inferior mesenteric and superior mesenteric: small and
large intestines
Hepatic portal circulation:
 Collects nutrient-rich venous blood from the digestive
viscera
 Delivers this blood to the liver for metabolic processing
and storage
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Histology of the Alimentary Canal
From esophagus to the anal canal the walls of the GI tract have
the same four tunics. From the lumen outward they are the:
 1. mucosa
 2. submucosa
 3. muscularis externa
 4. serosa
 Each tunic has a predominant tissue type and a specific
digestive function
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Histology of the Alimentary Canal
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Figure 23.6
1. Mucosa
Innermost moist epithelial layer that lines the lumen of the
alimentary canal
 Consists of three layers: a lining epithelium, lamina
propria, and muscularis mucosae
Its three major functions are:
 Secretion of mucus
 Absorption of the end products of digestion
 Protection against infectious disease
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Lining epithelium
 Consists of simple columnar epithelium and mucus-secreting
goblet cells
The mucus secretions:
 Protect digestive organs from digesting themselves
 Ease food along the tract
Stomach and small intestine mucosa contain:
 Enzyme-secreting cells
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Lamina propria
 Loose areolar and reticular connective tissue
 Nourishes the epithelium and absorbs nutrients
Muscularis mucosae
 smooth muscle cells that produce local movements of mucosa
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2. Submucosa – dense connective tissue containing elastic
fibers, blood and lymphatic vessels, lymph nodes, and
nerves
3. Muscularis externa – responsible for segmentation and
peristalsis
4. Serosa – the protective visceral peritoneum
 Replaced by the fibrous adventitia in the esophagus
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Mouth
Oral or buccal cavity:
 Is bounded by lips, cheeks, palate, and tongue
 Has the oral orifice as its anterior opening
 Is continuous with the oropharynx posteriorly
To withstand abrasions:
 The mouth is lined with stratified squamous epithelium
 The gums, hard palate, and dorsum of the tongue are
slightly keratinized
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Mouth
1. cheeks
2. lips (labia), labial frenulum (attach to gums)
3. hard palate - anterior part of roof of mouth (palatine bones)
4. soft palate - posterior of roof of mouth (mucous membrane)
5. uvula - hanging portion of soft palate (punching bag)
6. palatoglossal arch & palatopharyngeal arch
a. palatine tonsils between arches
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Anatomy of the Oral Cavity: Mouth
Figure 23.7a
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Oral Cavity and Pharynx: Anterior View
Figure 23.7b
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Tongue
Functions include:
 Gripping and repositioning food during chewing
 Mixing food with saliva and forming the bolus
 Initiation of swallowing, and speech
Note: Lingual frenulum secures the tongue to the floor of
the mouth
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Tongue
Superior surface bears three types of papillae:
 Filiform – give the tongue roughness and provide friction
 Fungiform – scattered widely over the tongue and give it
a reddish hue
 Circumvallate – V-shaped row in back of tongue
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Tongue
Figure 23.8
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Salivary Glands
 Parotid – lies anterior to the ear between the masseter
muscle and skin
 Parotid duct – opens into the vestibule next to the second
upper molar
 Submandibular – lies along the medial aspect of the
mandibular body
 Sublingual – lies anterior to the submandibular gland under
the tongue
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Salivary Glands
Figure 23.9a
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Permanent Teeth
Figure 23.10.2
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Classification of Teeth
Teeth are classified according to their shape and function:
 Incisors – chisel-shaped teeth adapted for cutting or
nipping
 Canines – conical or fanglike teeth that tear or pierce
 Premolars (bicuspids) and molars – have broad crowns
with rounded tips and are best suited for grinding or
crushing
 During chewing, upper and lower molars lock together
generating crushing force
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Tooth Structure
a. crown - above the level of the gums
b. root - one to three projections into socket
c. neck - between crown and root on gumline
d. dentin - hard shell of tooth
e. pulp cavity - center of tooth
f. pulp - lymph, blood, nerve, connective tissue
g. root canal - passage through roots to the pulp
i. apical foramen - opening at the base
h. enamel - covers the dentin on the crown
i. cementum - covers dentin on the root
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Tooth Structure
Figure 23.11
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Esophagus
 Muscular tube going from the laryngopharynx to the
stomach
 Travels through the mediastinum and pierces the diaphragm
 Joins the stomach at the cardiac orifice
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Stomach
- Chemical breakdown of proteins begins and food is converted
to chyme
 Cardiac region – surrounds the cardiac orifice
 Fundus – dome-shaped region beneath the diaphragm
 Body – midportion of the stomach
 Pyloric region – made up of the antrum and canal which
terminates at the pylorus
- The pylorus is continuous with the duodenum through the
pyloric sphincter
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Stomach
 Greater curvature – entire extent of the convex lateral
surface
 Lesser curvature – concave medial surface
 Lesser omentum – runs from the liver to the lesser curvature
 Greater omentum – drapes inferiorly from the greater
curvature to the small intestine
 Rugae - folds in the inner lining of the stomach
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Stomach
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Figure 23.14a
Stomach
 Blood supply – celiac trunk, and corresponding veins (part
of the hepatic portal system)
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Microscopic Anatomy of the Stomach
Epithelial lining is composed of:
 Goblet cells that produce a coat of alkaline mucus
- The mucous surface layer traps a bicarbonate-rich fluid
beneath it
 Gastric pits contain gastric glands that secrete gastric juice,
mucus, and gastrin
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Microscopic Anatomy of the Stomach
Figure 23.15
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Gastric glands of the fundus and body have a variety of
secretory cells
 Mucous neck cells – secrete acid mucus
 Parietal cells – secrete HCl
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Small Intestine: Gross Anatomy
 Runs from pyloric sphincter to the ileocecal valve
 The bile duct and main pancreatic duct join the
duodenum at the hepatopancreatic ampulla
 The ileum joins the large intestine at the ileocecal valve
Has three subdivisions:
1.duodenum
2. jejunum
3. ileum
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Small Intestine: Microscopic Anatomy
Structural modifications of the small intestine wall increase
surface area:
 Villi – fingerlike extensions of the mucosa
 Microvilli – tiny projections of absorptive mucosal cells’
plasma membranes
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Small Intestine: Microscopic Anatomy
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Figure 23.21
Small Intestine: Histology
The epithelium of the mucosa is made up of:
 Absorptive cells and goblet cells
 Cells of intestinal crypts secrete intestinal juice
 Peyer’s patches are found in the submucosa and are
collections of lymphatic/wbc tissue
 Brunner’s glands in the duodenum secrete alkaline mucus
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Pancreas - structure
posterior to great curvature of the stomach
1. head - enlarged portion in C-curve of the duodenum
2. body - tapers off beneath the stomach
3. tail - terminal part near the end
4. pancreatic duct - merges with bile duct to duodenum
a. hepatopancreatic ampulla (merging of both)
5. accessory duct - empties into duodenum, smaller
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Pancreas - histology
1. made of glandular epithelial cells
2. pancreatic islets (of Langerhans) (1% of all cells)
a. hormones: glucagon, insulin, somatostatin
3. acini - (99% of the cells in pancreas)
a. mixture of enzymes called "pancreatic juice"
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Liver
 Superficially has four lobes – right, left, caudate, and
quadrate
 The largest gland in the body
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Liver: Associated Structures
The falciform ligament:
 Separates the right and left lobes anteriorly
 Suspends the liver from the diaphragm and anterior abdominal
wall
The ligamentum teres:
 Is a remnant of the fetal umbilical vein
 Runs along the free edge of the falciform ligament
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Liver: Associated Structures
 The lesser omentum anchors the liver to the stomach
 The hepatic blood vessels enter the liver at the porta hepatis
 gallbladder - rests in a recess on the inferior surface of the
right lobe; stores bile for digestion of fats
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Bile
Bile leaves the liver via:
 Bile ducts, which fuse into the common hepatic duct
 The common hepatic duct, which fuses with the cystic
duct
 These two ducts form the bile duct
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Gallbladder and Associated Ducts
Figure 23.20
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Liver: Microscopic Anatomy
lobules are hexagonal shaped and the structural and functional units
of the liver
 Composed of hepatocyte (liver cell) plates radiating outward
from a central vein
 Portal triads are found at each of the six corners of each liver
lobule
portal triads consist of a bile duct and
 Hepatic artery – supplies oxygen-rich blood to the liver
 Hepatic portal vein – carries venous blood with nutrients
from digestive viscera
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Microscopic Anatomy of the Liver
Figure 23.24c, d
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 Liver sinusoids – enlarged, leaky capillaries located
between hepatic plates
 Kupffer cells – hepatic macrophages found in liver
sinusoids
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Hepatocytes
Hepatocyte functions include:
 Production of bile
 Processing bloodborne nutrients
 Storage of fat-soluble vitamins
 Detoxification
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The Gallbladder
 Thin-walled, green muscular sac on the ventral surface of the
liver
 Stores and concentrates bile by absorbing its water and ions
 Releases bile via the cystic duct, which flows into the bile
duct
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Large Intestine
 Is subdivided into the cecum, appendix, colon, rectum, and
anal canal
 The saclike cecum:
 Lies below the ileocecal valve in the right iliac fossa
 Contains a wormlike vermiform appendix
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Colon
Has distinct regions:
 ascending colon
 hepatic flexure
 transverse colon
 splenic flexure
 descending colon
 sigmoid colon
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Large Intestine
Figure 23.29a
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Colon
 The transverse and sigmoid portions are anchored
via mesenteries called mesocolons
 The sigmoid colon joins the rectum
 The anal canal, the last segment of the large
intestine, opens to the exterior at the anus
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Anus
 internal sphincter - smooth muscle (involuntary)
 external sphincter - skeletal muscle (voluntary)
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Mesenteries of Digestive Organs
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Figure 23.30b
Mesenteries of Digestive Organs
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Figure 23.30c
Mesenteries of Digestive Organs
Figure 23.30d
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